Panama to deepen talks with OECD

PANAMA CITY: Panama will deepen talks with the OECD on sharing tax information in the wake of the “Panama Papers” scandal, its vice president told Agence France-Presse in an exclusive interview on Thursday.

“We are going to establish technical-level dialogue between Panama and the OECD specifically on exchanging information,” said Isabel De Saint Malo, who is also the country’s foreign minister.

She said the talks were agreed earlier the same day in a “very good” conversation with the head of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Angel Gurria.

Panama is scrambling to avert being once again designated as a tax haven that facilitates money laundering, after the revelations of offshore dealings of many of the world’s wealthy, famous and infamous in the so-called Panama Papers revelations.

They came when millions of documents covering nearly 40 years of business were leaked from the archives of the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca.

The OECD has led the charge accusing Panama of not doing enough to implement transparency and information- sharing standards.

Gurria this week called the country “the last major holdout” allowing funds to be hidden from the authorities of other nations.

That prompted De Saint Malo’s deputy foreign minister, Luis Miguel Hincapie, to accuse Gurria of being “unfair and discriminatory.”

In the interview with Agence France-Presse, De Saint Malo also said that Panama would improve information-sharing with France, which warned this week it was looking at putting Panama back on its blacklist of tax havens.

Just two months ago, Panama managed to get off an international “gray list” of countries not doing enough to battle money laundering and possible terrorist financing.

In the past couple years, the government instituted a range of reforms to somewhat curb the anonymity its banking and legal businesses have created for offshore companies.

However, it has resisted fully implementing automatic reporting procedures set out by the OECD.

De Saint Malo stressed the “big steps” Panama had made so far.

“We hope that experts and people who know the subject will be able to look a bit at our practices, to make recommendations to us over what we’ve done and to help us refine these changes.”

She reiterated the government’s “zero tolerance for irregularities and shady dealings, and a strong commitment to transparency in the area of financial services.”

However, she acknowledged that Panama was “cautious” about further reforms because it wanted to ensure its nexus of banks and law firms with many international clients did not lose its competitive edge as a financial hub.